『Gulf of Thailand Dawn and Dusk: Barra, Jacks, and Mackerel on the Bite』のカバーアート

Gulf of Thailand Dawn and Dusk: Barra, Jacks, and Mackerel on the Bite

Gulf of Thailand Dawn and Dusk: Barra, Jacks, and Mackerel on the Bite

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This is Artificial Lure with your Gulf of Thailand fishing report. Along the upper Gulf from Chonburi down past Rayong, we’ve had **light southwest winds**, seas under a meter, and hot, humid air sitting in the low 30s Celsius this afternoon. Local marine forecasts are calling for scattered evening storms but mostly manageable conditions for small boats if you pick your windows and hug the coast. Sun came up around **5:50 a.m.** and dropped just after **6:45 p.m.**, so your prime bites have been those cooler edges of the day. Midday has been slow and sun‑bleached, with most action pushing into the last two hours of the flood and the first of the ebb. Tides in the central Gulf today have been **moderate**—not those huge spring swings, but enough current to wake things up on the points and channel edges. The best reports are coming from spots where the tide bends around structure: pier pilings, rock reefs, and river mouths pushing a bit of color into the green water. Inshore, local boats working around Pattaya and Sattahip report **good numbers of barramundi, mangrove jack, and queenfish** around the mangrove lines and harbor walls. Night anglers soaking live prawns and small mullet near lighted piers have been bringing in steady catches of **snapper and grouper**, with a few surprise cobia cruising under the bait schools. Further down toward Rayong and into the island chain, small speedboats have been picking up **Spanish mackerel, bonito, and the odd longtail tuna** off current lines and near fish traps. The numbers aren’t crazy, but enough for a solid box if you stay mobile and read the birds. For lures, the standout producers right now: - For barra and jacks in dirty or brackish water: **shallow‑running minnows in gold or bone**, 9–12 cm, slow rolled past structure. - For queenfish and mackerel: **15–30 g metal jigs and chrome spoons**, ripped fast through the top few meters. - Around reefs and wrecks: **soft plastics on 3/8–1/2 oz jigheads**, in natural baitfish or shrimp colors, hopped just off the bottom. If you’re bait fishing, you can’t beat **live prawns, small mullet, and squid strips**. Prawns for barra and snapper, mullet for jacks and grouper, squid for just about anything with teeth or attitude. Couple of **hot spots** to circle on your chart: - The **Sattahip bay and headland area**: mix of navy piers, rock, and mangrove edges. Great on the last of the incoming tide for barra and jacks, and nighttime snapper around the lights. - The **nearshore reefs off Rayong toward Koh Samet**: work the up‑current edges with metals for mackerel in the morning, then drop soft plastics or squid baits as the sun climbs and the fish go deeper. Overall, fish activity has been **better at dawn and dusk**, with enough recent catches of barra, mangrove jack, snapper, mackerel, and a sprinkle of tuna to keep things interesting if you match your tactics to the tide and stay out of that dead, hot middle of the day. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss a report. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. Great deals on fishing gear https://amzn.to/44gt1Pn
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